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Novel by Renata Adler, published in 1976 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Speedboat is a 1976 modernist novel by Renata Adler that offers a fragmentary account of the experiences of Jen Fain, a young journalist living in New York City.
Author | Renata Adler |
---|---|
Language | English |
Publisher | Random House |
Publication date | 1976 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | |
Pages | 178 pp |
ISBN | 0-394-48876-8 |
Prior to Speedboat, Adler was largely known for her nonfiction reportage in The New Yorker, and while Speedboat is billed as a novel it includes actual incidents and autobiographical elements; as Adler once remarked, "Some of it was real."[1] When the book was published in 1976, the 39-year-old Adler had temporarily left writing to become a first-year student at Yale Law School. "I guess I didn’t know what was going to happen when Speedboat came out", she later said. "I thought, I better be in law school, because who knows whether anyone will like it or not."[2] Speedboat received critical acclaim and won the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award for best debut work by an American writer of fiction. The prize was judged by E. L. Doctorow, Elizabeth Hardwick, and Susan Sontag.[3] The novel was also a finalist for the 1976 National Book Critics Circle Award.[4]
The novel fell out of print in 1988 but remained a cult favorite; while teaching at Pomona College, David Foster Wallace included Speedboat on the syllabus for a course on "obscure/eclectic fictions", and in 2000 David Shields declared it "one of the most original and formally exciting American novels published in the past 25 years."[5][6]
In 2013, Speedboat was reissued by New York Review Books simultaneously with Adler's second novel, Pitch Dark; both works enjoyed a renewed wave of attention.[2] The Chicago Tribune referred to Speedboat as a "perfect novel", and Anna Wiener wrote in The New Republic that, "Out of the blue, it seemed like everyone I knew was reading and discussing Adler. ... New York City booksellers pushed [Speedboat] as a recovered sacred text [and] Adler earned a new coterie of readers."[7][8] Writers Ezra Furman,[9] Rachel Khong,[10] Jenny Offill,[11] and Kate Zambreno[12] have subsequently cited Speedboat as an influence. In 2015, Joan Didion, to whom Adler has sometimes been compared, included Speedboat in her list of all-time favorite books.[13]
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